"Quick treatment" for prostatitis is a lie and a trap!
As for the treatment of prostatitis, there are many so-called "quick-acting" treatment methods in clinical practice. Some have achieved complete improvement in one month, some have achieved complete improvement in half a month, and even some have achieved complete improvement in a week!
However, from the actual results of clinical observation, these so-called "quick-acting" treatment methods for prostatitis are simply exaggerated.
It is understood that the only way for men's prostate to contact the outside world is through a narrow and long urethra. Therefore, the probability of prostate being attacked by foreign bacteria and causing acute bacterial inflammation is very low. What really bothers male friends is mainly chronic aseptic inflammation.
As the saying goes, "Rome wasn't built in a day". Chronic diseases, including prostatitis, are gradually developed on the basis of the accumulation of diseases.
Therefore, prostatitis can only be effectively treated and even completely improved if the root cause of the disease is resolved. However, because prostatitis is gradually developed on the basis of the accumulation of the root causes, the solution of the root causes of prostatitis is also a relatively slow process.
Take the relatively common physical hyperthermia as an example:
On the surface, physical hyperthermia can really achieve the goal of rapid "improvement" of prostatitis. It is understood that a considerable part of prostatitis can basically achieve "improvement" of prostatitis after 1-2 weeks of physical hyperthermia.
However, this "improvement" is usually temporary.
Experts pointed out that the main role of physical hyperthermia is to accelerate the blood circulation of the prostate, achieve the dissipation of superficial inflammation and relieve the corresponding symptoms.
In fact, since the root cause of prostatitis has not been eradicated from the source, physical hyperthermia, whether for aseptic chronic prostatitis or bacterial acute prostatitis, cannot achieve the goal of "radical cure".
Therefore, experts remind: in order not to spend money unjustly, the vast majority of prostatitis patients should not be credulous of the so-called "rapid treatment" of prostatitis.